Caries Interpretation Flashcards

1
Q

one of the most prevalent human
diseases

A

DENTAL CARIES

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2
Q

decreasing prevalence rate finally
occurred in —’s

A

1980

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3
Q

DENTAL CARIES
Epidemiology
* disease of

A

“civilized” societies

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4
Q

DENTAL CARIES
Epidemiology
associated with

A

highly refined sugar and
retentive food diets that remains
prevalent in lower socio-economic groups.

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5
Q

DENTAL CARIES
Epidemiology
greatest cause of tooth loss < or equal to – years

A

35

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6
Q

DENTAL CARIES
Pathophysiology
related to

A

bacterial adhesion to tooth
surfaces and plaque formation

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7
Q

DENTAL CARIES
Pathophysiology
plaque composed of

A

polysaccharide/enzyme
matrix with bacterial colonies that attach to
tooth surfaces

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8
Q

Bacteria metabolize dietary carbohydrate
producing

A

acid byproducts that lower pH
below 5.5 threshold to decalcify teeth

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9
Q

DENTAL CARIES
Predisposing Factors
(5)

A
  1. bacteria –varies
  2. diet –glucose
  3. plaque retention
  4. OH compliance
  5. saliva - concentrations of salivary glycoproteins
    and immunoglobulins
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10
Q
  1. bacteria –varies
    - dependent on host
    (3)
A

a. lactobacillus casei
b. streptococcus mutans
c. actinomyces viscosus

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11
Q

DENTAL CARIES Signs
ranges from —
to gross —

A

slight
demineralization

coronal
decay

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12
Q

defects appear as violations of
(3)

A

i. - smooth surfaces, usually at
inaccessible areas
ii. - pit and fissures of occlusal
and occasional proximal surfaces

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13
Q

DENTAL CARIES
Diagnosis
(3)

A

i. easy to diagnose
ii. Not so easy to stage
iii. Harder to treatment plan

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14
Q

Periapical Radiography
(2)

A
  1. Helpful for caries detection if XCP technique used to
    minimize linear distortion in the vertical dimension
  2. Horizontal angulation must project non-overlapped
    contacts
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15
Q

Vertical Bitewings
Not as useful because
(2)

A

a. technique problems from bending of the film
b. Difficulty placing film to open contacts

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16
Q

Factors affecting Caries Presentation
(9)

A
  1. Angle of the x-ray beam
  2. Placement of the image receptor
  3. Location of the proximal carious lesion
    (i.e. exactly cervical to the contact or slightly
    buccal/lingual)
  4. Degree of hypomineralization
  5. Exposure factors; low kV vs high kV;
  6. Degree of cavitation
  7. Ambient light intensity
  8. Monitor contrast resolution calibration
  9. Selection of postprocessing algorithms on
    digital images
17
Q

Factors affecting perception of digital
display
(3)

A
  • monitor resolution
  • monitor luminescence
  • background lighting affect
18
Q

standard commercial grade desktop monitors
have been shown to be inferior for

A

diagnostic
medical radiology

19
Q

CARIES
IC=
MC=
AC=
RSC-
R RC=
B/Li =

A

Initial caries
Moderate caries
Advanced caries
Root surface caries
Recurrent caries
B or Li caries

20
Q

initial caries
(2)

A

in enamel layer
ranges from a demineralization defect at the proximal surface and can extend axillary to contact the DEJ

21
Q

moderate caries
(2)

A

spreading vertically at the DEJ and/or
extending axillary < half way in dentin layer

22
Q

advanced caries
(1)

A

> or equal to halfway in dentin layer and can extend axillary to contact the pulp

23
Q

Root caries- appearance:
- –% prevalence in geriatric population
- Most common in

A

Saucerized or scooped-out
50
B premolar regions,
then, followed by Li & interproximal areas

24
Q

B or Li caries
Difficult to localize on a single view bc…

A

May superimpose pulp

25
Q

International Caries Detection and Assessment System

A

ICDAS
* E1
* E2
* D1
* D2
* D3

26
Q

E1

A

Lesion within outer ½ of enamel

27
Q

E2

A

Lesion within inner ½ of enamel

28
Q

D1

A

lesion within outer 1/3 of dentin

29
Q

D2

A

lesion within middle 1/3 of dentin

30
Q

D3

A

lesion within inner 1/3 of dentin

31
Q

E1 Interproximal Caries

A
  • Penetrates < ½ the enamel thickness as a
    radiolucent notch on the outer surface of the
    tooth
32
Q

E2 Interproximal Caries
(3)

A
  • Penetrates > ½ the enamel thickness
  • May have an isosceles triangular outline with the
    base at the proximal surface
  • Does NOT extend to DEJ
33
Q

D1 Interproximal Caries
(3)

A
  • Undermines enamel and extends into dentin
  • at or axial to the DEJ
  • Penetrates < 1/3 the outer peripheral dentin thickness
34
Q

D2 Interproximal Caries
(2)

A
  • The dentin lesion is a more extensive dentin lesion
  • Penetrates to mid 1/3 of the dentin thickness
35
Q

D3 Interproximal Caries
(2)

A
  • The dentin lesion is more extensive than the enamel
    lesion
  • Penetrates > 2/3 (or inner 1/3) of the dentin thickness
36
Q

Interproximal “Burn out”
(2)

A

A. The dentin artifact simulates caries
B. Lesion is outlined by normal anatomic structures and is a relative radiolucency

37
Q

Incipient Occlusal Caries
* Difficult to detect on radiographs due to
(2)

A
  • small width of the lesion
  • density of superimposing enamel
38
Q

Moderate Occlusal Caries
(2)

A
  • Broad-based thin radiolucent zone in dentin with
    no changes in enamel
  • Noticed as a relative increase in opacity between
    pulp and caries
39
Q

Severe Occlusal Caries

A
  • Undermined enamel with gross loss of tooth
    structure